National Register of Historic Places listings in South Dakota

National Register of Historic Places listings in South Dakota

This is a list of properties and historic districts in South Dakota that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The state's 1,272 listings are distributed across 65 of its 66 counties.

The locations of National Register properties and districts (at least for all showing latitude and longitude coordinates below), may be seen in a Google map by clicking on "Map of all coordinates".[1]

The following are approximate tallies of current listings by county.[2]

Current listings by county

South Dakota State Capitol, in Hughes County
Coughlin Campanile, in Brookings County
Deadwood, in Lawrence County
County # of Sites
1 Aurora 9
2 Beadle 25
3 Bennett 0
4 Bon Homme 39
5 Brookings 38
6 Brown 44
7 Brule 6
8 Buffalo 6
9 Butte 35
10 Campbell 2
11 Charles Mix 11
12 Clark 9
13 Clay 38
14 Codington 44
15 Corson 8
16 Custer 46
17 Davison 23
18 Day 10
19 Deuel 10
20 Dewey 5
21 Douglas 8
22 Edmunds 12
23 Fall River 72
24 Faulk 8
25 Grant 15
26 Gregory 10
27 Haakon 2
28 Hamlin 13
29 Hand 6
30 Hanson 6
31 Harding 56
32 Hughes 40
33 Hutchinson 29
34 Hyde 3
35 Jackson 8
36 Jerauld 12
37 Jones 3
38 Kingsbury 20
39 Lake 15
40 Lawrence 50
41 Lincoln 24
42 Lyman 8
43 Marshall 6
44 McCook 8
45 McPherson 4
46 Meade 27
47 Mellette 2
48 Miner 3
49 Minnehaha 95
50 Moody 14
51 Pennington 55
52 Perkins 18
53 Potter 8
54 Roberts 10
55 Sanborn 8
56 Shannon 1
57 Spink 25
58 Stanley 12
59 Sully 4
60 Todd 4
61 Tripp 6
62 Turner 30
63 Union 14
64 Walworth 13
65 Yankton 77
66 Ziebach 1
(duplicates): (1)[3]
Total: 1,272
NRHP South Dakota Map.svg
Bear Butte, in Meade County
Old Minnehaha County Courthouse, in Minnehaha County
This National Park Service list is complete through NPS recent listings posted November 10, 2011.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ The latitude and longitude information provided in this table was derived originally from the National Register Information System, which has been found to be fairly accurate for about 99% of listings. For about 1% of NRIS original coordinates, experience has shown that one or both coordinates are typos or otherwise extremely far off; some corrections may have been made. A more subtle problem causes many locations to be off by up to 150 yards, depending on location in the country: most NRIS coordinates were derived from tracing out latitude and longitudes off of USGS topographical quadrant maps created under the North American Datum of 1927, which differs from the current, highly accurate WGS84 GPS system used by Google maps. Chicago is about right, but NRIS longitudes in Washington are higher by about 4.5 seconds, and are lower by about 2.0 seconds in Maine. Latitudes differ by about 1.0 second in Florida. Some locations in this table may have been corrected to current GPS standards.
  2. ^ These counts are based on entries in the National Register Information Database as of March 13, 2009 and new weekly listings posted since then on the National Register of Historic Places web site. There are frequent additions to the listings and occasional delistings and the counts here are approximate and not official. New entries are added to the official Register on a weekly basis. Also, the counts in this table exclude boundary increase and decrease listings which only modify the area covered by an existing property or district, although carrying a separate National Register reference number.
  3. ^ Medicine Creek Archeological District in Hughes and Lyman counties
  4. ^ "National Register of Historic Places: Weekly List Actions". National Park Service, United States Department of the Interior. Retrieved on November 10, 2011.

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